Can the Performing Arts Boost Student Outcomes in STEM Disciplines?

Can participation in the arts really bolster scientific learning? Can dance, in particular, spark STEM success? 

Can participation in the arts really bolster scientific learning? Can dance, in particular, spark STEM success?

A recent paper from North Carolina State University suggests this might just be the case.

The authors conducted interviews and focus groups with students who took part in on-campus dance companies as undergraduates. Fifteen of the 25 subjects were STEM majors, studying in field such as applied mathematics, engineering and chemistry.

"Our core question was what drives students to participate in the arts at an institution where there are no arts majors and there is an emphasis on STEM," lead author Fay Cobb Payton, a University Faculty Scholar and professor of information systems and technology, said in a prepared statement. "We wanted to know what benefits students get from engaging in the arts when they're majoring in other disciplines."

Their findings suggest that dance helped the science students to develop strengths in critical areas such as creativity and persistence, thus bolstering their classroom outcomes.

Participants in the study said that their dance companies fostered a sense of community, gave them an outlet for self-expression and introduced them to a more diverse group of people.

Moreover, dance "made them more creative in the way they approached problem-solving in the laboratory or classroom," Payton said. "For example, the dancers said they were accustomed to working as part of a group, and felt this helped them incorporate multiple viewpoints when tackling academic challenges."

This was only a small pilot study, and the researchers have said they'd like to see larger studies with more quantitative outcomes. The goals would be to eventually develop best practices for incorporating more diverse fields of study, in order to use the arts to improve STEM outcomes.

About the Author

Based in Annapolis, MD, Adam Stone writes on education technology, government and military topics.

Featured

  • minimalist digital network with glowing interconnected lines and nodes

    Integration Brings Cerebras Inference Capabilities to Hugging Face Hub

    AI hardware company Cerebras has teamed up with Hugging Face, the open source platform and community for machine learning, to integrate its inference capabilities into the Hugging Face Hub.

  • From Fire TV to Signage Stick: University of Utah's Digital Signage Evolution

    Jake Sorensen, who oversees sponsorship and advertising and Student Media in Auxiliary Business Development at the University of Utah, has navigated the digital signage landscape for nearly 15 years. He was managing hundreds of devices on campus that were incompatible with digital signage requirements and needed a solution that was reliable and lowered labor costs. The Amazon Signage Stick, specifically engineered for digital signage applications, gave him the stability and design functionality the University of Utah needed, along with the assurance of long-term support.

  • man with clipboard using an instrument to take a measurement of a cloud

    Internet2 Kicks Off 2025 with a Major Cloud Scorecard Update

    The latest release on Internet2's Cloud Scorecard Finder website previews new features that include dynamic selection criteria and options to explore multiple solutions side-by-side. More updates are planned in the new year.

  • central laptop surrounded by abstract human figures and structured, interconnected nodes

    Purdue Adopts D2L Brightspace to Augment Digital Learning, Accessibility

    Purdue University has implemented D2L Brightspace as a "one-stop centralized learning environment" for its on-campus, hybrid, and digital courses.